Looks + adjective -That picture looks crooked.
- The sky looks threatening.
- His girlfriend looks glamorous.
- That sombrero looks Mexican.
'look like' + a noun/pronoun, or a whole clause:
- That picture looks like it is about to fall.
- The sky looks like a sea of black clouds.
- His girlfriend looks like Marilyn Monroe.
- That sombrero looks like it was made in Mexico.
STRUCTURES
Present perfect vs. Simple past (Revision)Simple past and Past continuous (revision)
Future forms: will, going to, present continuous
future forms
Past perfect
special meanings/uses of Shall I
been to
present perfect continuous + for/since
comparatives and superlatives
It takes/took (me) 5 minutes ……The bus takes… How long does it take you to…..?
obligations: must, have to, should
obligations
[[http://Look-look like |Look-look like]]
Looks + adjective
-That picture looks crooked.
- The sky looks threatening.
- His girlfriend looks glamorous.
- That sombrero looks Mexican.
'look like' + a noun/pronoun, or a whole clause:
- That picture looks like it is about to fall.
- The sky looks like a sea of black clouds.
- His girlfriend looks like Marilyn Monroe.
- That sombrero looks like it was made in Mexico.
must, may, might, can’t for deduction
Can, could, be able to
ed- and –ing adjectives
Conditional sentences I
conditional sentences I
Unless
If and unless
Unless means the same as if ... not. It always refer to the conditional part of the sentence and not the result part of the sentence:
If he doesn't get here soon, we will have to start the meeting without him.
Unless he gets here soon, we will have to start the meeting without him.
We often use not + unless, which means only ... if, when we want to emphasize a condition:
They will only sign the contract if we give them an additional discount.
They won't sign the contract unless we give them an additional discount.
If or unless
Clauses of time with future time reference
Conjunctions of time: when, after, before, until, as soon as